Do they have coupon flyers at the store? Or..you have to have one of them through the mail?

I get them in the mail. It seems to vary from store to store, but they'll generally hand them out at the member service desk if you ask. Some stores seem to just automatically apply them even if you don't have one, or if you have any coupon from the pack, they'll apply them for everything in the coupon book.

I'd like to try this on some hubs but don't want to have to unlace them so I can soak them in a tub. I wonder what you could mix the pine-sol with to make it like a gel? That way I could spray/brush it on the hubs and it wouldn't dry up in 30 minutes. Make sense?

I'd like to try this on some hubs but don't want to have to unlace them so I can soak them in a tub. I wonder what you could mix the pine-sol with to make it like a gel? That way I could spray/brush it on the hubs and it wouldn't dry up in 30 minutes. Make sense?

I'd like to try this on some hubs but don't want to have to unlace them so I can soak them in a tub. I wonder what you could mix the pine-sol with to make it like a gel? That way I could spray/brush it on the hubs and it wouldn't dry up in 30 minutes. Make sense?

When I took the automatic fuel petcock out of the vat, it's 27 year old rubber hoses looked very clean- no deterioration noted-

Anything rubber or vinyl coated will be fine, and it’ll keep the squirrels from chewing through your fuel lines too.

Many years ago as a mechanic on a heli-portable seismic crew, I would help the boys lay out hundreds of meters of electronic cabling, of which was connected to IO boxes and geophones, and some of which would invariably be left in place overnight.

Come day light there would always be some sections of cable that required removal and replacement, as the deer, rabbits, squirrels and anything else with teeth would take a fancy to the coating on the cabling and chew up meters and meters of the stuff.

Until we discovered the magic of Pine-Sol.

Whenever we experienced ‘nibblers’ on a job, I would go into the nearest town and buy the stuff by the case, bring it back out to the equipment staging area and dump a half a gallon on each chute load of equipment that the choppers would lift out to the line.

No more chewed cables.

And it kept the bears out of the garbage too.

There is one drawback though.

Each morning, as the helicopter flew you down to the end of line, even at 200 feet above the tress, the whole mountain side smelled faintly like a hospital.